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Multiple sclerosis: time for early treatment with high-efficacy drugs
by
Hartung, Hans-Peter
, Selmaj, Krzysztof
, Cree, Bruce A. C.
, Thompson, Alan
, Barnett, Michael
in
Anti-inflammatory agents
/ Humans
/ Inflammation
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Multiple sclerosis
/ Multiple Sclerosis - diagnostic imaging
/ Multiple Sclerosis - drug therapy
/ Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting - drug therapy
/ Neurology
/ Neuroradiology
/ Neurosciences
/ Patients
/ Pharmaceutical Preparations
/ Population studies
/ Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
/ Review
/ Treatment Outcome
2024
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Multiple sclerosis: time for early treatment with high-efficacy drugs
by
Hartung, Hans-Peter
, Selmaj, Krzysztof
, Cree, Bruce A. C.
, Thompson, Alan
, Barnett, Michael
in
Anti-inflammatory agents
/ Humans
/ Inflammation
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Multiple sclerosis
/ Multiple Sclerosis - diagnostic imaging
/ Multiple Sclerosis - drug therapy
/ Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting - drug therapy
/ Neurology
/ Neuroradiology
/ Neurosciences
/ Patients
/ Pharmaceutical Preparations
/ Population studies
/ Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
/ Review
/ Treatment Outcome
2024
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Multiple sclerosis: time for early treatment with high-efficacy drugs
by
Hartung, Hans-Peter
, Selmaj, Krzysztof
, Cree, Bruce A. C.
, Thompson, Alan
, Barnett, Michael
in
Anti-inflammatory agents
/ Humans
/ Inflammation
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Multiple sclerosis
/ Multiple Sclerosis - diagnostic imaging
/ Multiple Sclerosis - drug therapy
/ Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting - drug therapy
/ Neurology
/ Neuroradiology
/ Neurosciences
/ Patients
/ Pharmaceutical Preparations
/ Population studies
/ Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
/ Review
/ Treatment Outcome
2024
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Multiple sclerosis: time for early treatment with high-efficacy drugs
Journal Article
Multiple sclerosis: time for early treatment with high-efficacy drugs
2024
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Overview
This review addresses current changes in the approach to treating patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). The widely practiced approach of utilizing agents with lower treatment efficacy (LETA) at onset with subsequent escalation has been challenged by new data suggesting that MS patients derive greater benefit when therapy is initiated with high-efficacy treatment agents (HETA). Several recent studies compared treatment efficacy and safety of early administration of HETA versus LETA. The results of randomized, double blind, phase III studies with LETA as a control arm and population-based larger and longer studies using propensity scoring, marginal structural modeling and weighted cumulative exposure analysis support the benefit of early treatment with HETA. Patients initiating their treatment with HETA, regardless of prognostic factors and MRI burden at baseline, showed significantly lower annualized relapse rate (ARR) and reduced disability progression in follow-up periods of up to 10–15 years. Moreover, the safety profile of recently approved HETA ameliorates concerns about off-target effects associated with a number of earlier high-efficacy drugs. Patient perception has also changed with an increasing preference for medication profiles that both improve symptoms and prevent disease progression. Accumulating data from randomized studies and the results of large population-based studies demonstrating short-term and longer-term patient benefits support the view that HETA should be more widely used. The adoption of early treatment with HETA capitalizes on a window of opportunity for anti-inflammatory drugs to maximally impact disease pathology and heralds a sea change in clinical practice toward pro-active management and away from a philosophy routed in generating clinical benefit as a consequence of treatment failure.
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg,Springer Nature B.V
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